General Topology I: Basic Concepts and Constructions Dimension Theory
โ Scribed by A. V. Arkhangelโskiว, V. V. Fedorchuk (auth.), A. V. Arkhangelโskii, L. S. Pontryagin (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 209
- Series
- Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences 17
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This is the first of the encyclopaedia volumes devoted to general topology. It has two parts. The first outlines the basic concepts and constructions of general topology, including several topics which have not previously been covered in English language texts. The second part presents a survey of dimension theory, from the very beginnings to the most important recent developments. The principal ideas and methods are treated in detail, and the main results are provided with sketches of proofs. The authors have suceeded admirably in the difficult task of writing a book which will not only be accessible to the general scientist and the undergraduate, but will also appeal to the professional mathematician. The authors' efforts to detail the relationship between more specialized topics and the central themes of topology give the book a broad scholarly appeal which far transcends narrow disciplinary lines.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-viii
The Basic Concepts and Constructions of General Topology....Pages 1-90
The Fundamentals of Dimension Theory....Pages 91-192
Back Matter....Pages 193-204
โฆ Subjects
Topology; Geometry; Analysis
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><span>This first of the three-volume book is targeted as a basic course in topology for undergraduate and graduate students of mathematics. It studies metric spaces and general topology. It starts with the concept of the metric which is an abstraction of distance in the Euclidean space. The speci
<p><span>This first of the three-volume book is targeted as a basic course in topology for undergraduate and graduate students of mathematics. It studies metric spaces and general topology. It starts with the concept of the metric which is an abstraction of distance in the Euclidean space. The speci
<p><P>Variational analysis is a fruitful area in mathematics that, on the one hand, deals with the study of optimization and equilibrium problems and, on the other hand, applies optimization, perturbation, and approximation ideas to the analysis of a broad range of problems that may not be of a vari
<P>Comprehensive and state-of-the art study of the basic concepts and principles of variational analysis and generalized differentiation in both finite-dimensional and infinite-dimensional spaces</P> <P>Presents numerous applications to problems in the optimization, equilibria, stability and sensiti